Significant Growth in Brute-Force Attacks in Indonesia

The report doesn’t lie — the sum total of automated hacking attempts in Indonesia has increased noticeably throughout the past two weeks. The brute-force attacks have shot up by 52 percent throughout the past two weeks, according to evidence from Windows servers secured by Syspeace. In the whole world, there was a slight escalation of 17 percent.

Syspeace registered 30 brute-force attacks per Windows servers in Indonesia throughout the two weeks prior. That means the automated hacking attempts increased noticeably by 52 percent. That means 35 total the number of automated hacking attempts in the Indonesia throughout the 14 days prior were blocked by Syspeace.

Lithuania and Hungary have – for comparison purposes – been under increased attacks. With 270 blocked automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured server the past two weeks, Lithuania has seen an increase of 55 percent compared to the 14 days prior. In Hungary, the sum total has increased by 27 percent to 570 automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured server.

Indonesia is not alone. The attacks on Syspeace-secured Windows Servers have shown a slight growth all around the world. There have been 17 percent more brute-force attacks in the world on Windows servers secured by Syspeace in the throughout the two weeks prior compared to the previous 14-day period. So far, this year there have been 1,700 automated hacking attempts per Syspeace-secured Windows Server in the world. The brute-force attacks have declined by 9 percent on a year-to-year comparison. Simply put, Syspeace blocked 1,500,000 automated hacking attempts in the world.

The evidence is provided by Syspeace, a company that helps fight automated hacking attempts. Syspeace saves companies time, effort, and money by blocking attacks that otherwise take many hours of repetitive, manual labor to discover and prevent. Syspeace tracks all the global Syspeace-secured Windows Servers carefully. The company is a global trailblazer on the topic since 2012, having collected and analyzed data on automated hacking attempts.

An automated hacking attempt consists of an attacker submitting many passwords or passphrases with the hope of ultimately guessing them. The attacker systematically inspects all possible passwords and passphrases and tries to find the right one.

To avoid problems and block automated hacking attempts, Syspeace offers software that protects enterprises from IT theft, combined with outstanding customer support.